When it comes to training camp arrivals, Washington quarterback Kirk Cousins is the anti-Reggie Wayne.

Unlike the Indianapolis Colts receiver, who pulled into the parking lot of the Colts camp facility last week in an Indy car driven by professional driver Ed Carpenter, Cousins opted for a more conservative method of transportation when he and his wife, Julie, arrived in town in a conversion van.

First road trip in the conversion van! Looking forward to the start of a new football season as we drive to Virginia! pic.twitter.com/YXwVGiND9I

The van, a limited-edition 2000 model, belonged to his grandfather who passed away during the offseason, Cousins told The Washington Post, and it was no longer needed by his grandmother. So he bought it from her.

“It’ll serve us well (in the Washington area), because my wife and I each have a car, but then when people come into town, it’ll kind of be a third car,” said Cousins, the former Michigan State quarterback and Holland native. “And it’s perfect for driving the hour-and-a-half from Ashburn to the games. And then they can tailgate, and they’ve got a TV in there, and you can kind of carry luggage in there. So it works well when visitors come to town for games, and Julie and I will take it on road trips in the offseason.”

Cousins’ entrance wasn’t as grand as Wayne’s for other reasons, too, since Washington players reach the practice facility in Richmond, Va., via a shuttle bus. So the van has not yet been seen by his teammates.

“Wait until I roll into the facility when we get back to Ashburn,” Cousins said. “That’ll be fun. I think my teammates will laugh a little bit.”

Before he left, Cousins said the van even attracted attention around West Michigan.

“You know what, sometimes I’d pull up to a stoplight when I was driving around Holland, and I think they’d expect an elderly person or a middle-aged dad to be pulling up,” he said. “And sure enough, I pull up.”